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Journal ArticleDOI

The ties that bind: Social network principles in online communities

Dale Ganley, +1 more
- Vol. 47, Iss: 3, pp 266-274
TLDR
It is found that Slashdot users develop deep networks at lower levels of participation indicating value from closure and that participation intensity helps increase the returns.
Abstract
In a Web 2.0 environment, the online community is fundamental to the business model, and participants in the online community are often motivated and rewarded by abstract concepts of social capital. How networks of relationships in online communities are structured has important implications for how social capital may be generated, which is critical to both attract and govern the necessary user base to sustain the site. We examine a popular website, Slashdot, which uses a system by which users can declare relationships with other users, and also has an embedded reputation system to rank users called 'Karma'. We test the relationship between user's Karma level and the social network structure, measured by structural holes, to evaluate the brokerage and closure theories of social capital development. We find that Slashdot users develop deep networks at lower levels of participation indicating value from closure and that participation intensity helps increase the returns. We conclude with some comments on mechanism design which would exploit these findings to optimize the social networks and potentially increase the opportunities for monetization.

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Citations
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Models and methods in social network analysis

TL;DR: Models and Methods in Social Network Analysis presents the most important developments in quantitative models and methods for analyzing social network data that have appeared during the 1990s.
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Social networking on smartphones: When mobile phones become addictive

TL;DR: It is found that the use of SNS mobile applications is a significant predictor of mobile addiction and the result shows that theUse of S NS mobile applications are affected by both SNS network size and SNS intensity of the user.
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Brand communities embedded in social networks.

TL;DR: The netnographic approach yields strong evidence of the existence of brand communities within social networks, leading to a better understanding of such embedded brand communities, their peculiarities, and motivational drivers for participation; therefore the findings contribute to theory by combining two separate research streams.
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Enhancing the Motivational Affordance of Information Systems: The Effects of Real-Time Performance Feedback and Goal Setting in Group Collaboration Environments

TL;DR: This work manipulates the interface of a computer-mediated idea generation system to enhance the system's motivational affordance, i.e., the system’s properties that fulfill users' motivational needs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: A growing number of sociologists, political scientists, economists, and organizational theorists have invoked the concept of social capital in the search for answers to a broadening range of questions being confronted in their own fields as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Network Structure Of Social Capital

TL;DR: A review of argument and evidence on the connection between social networks and social capital can be found in this paper, where the authors focus on the network mechanisms responsible for social capital effects rather than trying to integrate across metaphors of social capital loosely tied to distant empirical indicators.
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